Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Lunar eclipse

The full moon of March is traditionally known as the "Worm Moon".  This year it was also eclipsed.

 The sequence below spanned the time from 2:52 am to 4:46 am MST in the wee hours of 03 March.  There was a cloud band to the north at the start and some clouds did eventually come sliding past, but the eclipse was mostly unobstructed.  I gave up just before the official end of totality because a stubborn cloud was partially obscuring the moon.

The copper hue captured so well by the camera was not very apparent visually.  Even when viewed through the Sightron D50 refractor at 22x, the color was very washed out.  There may have been a high thin cloud layer attenuating the color.  A hint of this haze layer is evident in the middle picture of the montage below.

Equipment used: Astro-Tech AT72EDII refractor + Olympus E-M5iii camera on a ZWO AM3 mount.

Maximum eclipse: 04:34 am

 

Just past peak, with background stars visible (north to the right)


Monday, March 2, 2026

Some favorites from 2025

 I was recently looking for some general-interest photos from last year and came up with this short list.  There is only one Milky Way photo in the set, and its the winter Milky Way, not the more impressive summer version.

Northern Lights over Creede, 11 Nov. Laowa 15mm f/2.

 
Venus, Jupiter, and Orion rising over Snowshoe Mountain, 02 Sep. Leica 9mm f/1.7.

Venus is immersed in the soft glow of Zodiacal Light just above the mountain ridgeline.

Jupiter, Orion, and Sirius over Snowshoe Mt, 02 Sep. Olympus 17mm f/1.8.

Sirius is the brightest star in the night sky, but in the two photos above it is outshone by the planets Jupiter and Venus.  The reddish hue of the supergiant star Betelgeuse also stands out nicely in the second photo.

Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon) setting behind Bristol Head, 29 Oct. Canon FD 300mm f/4L.

The Winter Milky Way, 02 Nov. Leica 9mm f/1.7

In this photo the winter Milky Way arcs above the green airglow along the southern horizon.  There is a beam of blue light projecting upward from the bottom right.  This comes from an inconsiderate landowner two miles away on Highway 149.  I was initially annoyed by this light trespass (and still am), but it does add an unusual element to the picture.

Sunday, March 1, 2026

February Moon, March Sun

 Last night (28 Feb) the Sightron infini D50 f/10.8 refractor was used to photograph the 12.4-day moon.  There were some thin cloud bands passing, but there was enough time to catch a clear shot.  The camera used on the moon was the Olympus E-M5iii.

This morning (01 Mar), the D50 was used with a ZWO ASI294MC-Pro camera to photograph the sun.  In addition to a front-mounted Baader solar filter,  ND-0.9 and UV-IR-cut filters were also used.  

Both of these shots were meant to test a new mounting arrangement for the D50 refractor.  This scope ships with a 4-inch flush-mounted  Vixen dovetail that works fine with the light-weight stock diagonal and eyepieces.  However, when heavier accessories are attached, such as a camera or large eyepiece, balance becomes tricky because there is not enough forward movement available. The new arrangement consists of two More Blue 60-mm tube rings (from Astro Hutech)  and PrimaLuceLab dual-sided Vixen-Arca-Swiss dovetails.


 

Sunspots are visible again after a stretch of several spotless days.

Moon photography setup.

 
Solar photography setup.

Monday, February 23, 2026

The Moon at 5.7 days

 There were some thin clouds in the early-evening western sky, but they didn't prevent getting a shot of the 5.7-d moon.  The telescope used was the Sightron Japan infini D50, a 50-mm aperture, 540-mm focal length achromat.   This scope seems to perform quite well.  There is only a hint of chromatic aberration along the limb of the moon in the digital image.  Visually, a Nagler T6 5-mm eyepiece was used to provide a 108x view of Jupiter.  The cloud bands were very well defined.


 

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Spotless Sun

 There are currently no sunspots visible on the face of the sun.  It is blank.


 This image was taken with a Sightron Infini D50 refractor (50mm, f/10.8) and a front-mounted solar filter.

infini D50

 Compare the spotless image above to the sun two weeks ago on 7 February, when a large active sunspot group was traversing the face:

7 February, AT72EDII refractor.


 Sunspots may be absent, but the sun is far from quiet.  Many large prominences are visible around the rim in hydrogen-alpha light.

Today, 22 Feb. Hydrogen-alpha sun.  Lunt LS50THa double-stacked.

 
false-color image.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

The Moon at 4.7 days

 Tonight  (Saturday) the Moon is 4.7 days past new.  This image was taken with an Orion 80mm ED f/7.5 refractor and Olympus E-M5iii camera.  The large circular feature near the middle on the terminator is Mare Nectaris.


 

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Some more star clusters and four nearby stars

 The telescope used last night was an Astro-Tech AT72EDII refractor with an Astro-Tech 0.8x focal reducer.  This combination gives a focal length of 346 mm at f/4.8.  This reducer shows very little corner vignetting on the micro-four-thirds sensor of the E-M5iii camera, unlike the Metabones 0.71x Speedbooster. Sky brightness was 19.72 mpsas, which is on the better side of average for this location.  Exposures were either 30 sec or 40 sec at ISO 1600.

 

NGC 2281, an open cluster in Auriga.  2-deg FOV.

 

M44, the "Beehive Cluster", in Cancer.  2-deg FOV.

M67, the "Golden Eye Cluster", in Cancer.  2-deg FOV.

NGC 2232 in Monoceros. 2-deg FOV.

NGC 2244 in Monoceros.  2-deg FOV.

The open cluster NGC 2244 lies at the heart of the Rosette Nebula in the constellation Monoceros.  The nebula is too faint to show up easily in a 40-sec exposure with this optical configuration, but some extreme contrast enhancement reveals its presence:


 There are 37 star systems closer than 15 light years (ly).  Eleven of these systems contain either two or three stars, so there are 50 stars total within this distance.  Only seven of these 50 stars (or pairs) are bright enough to be seen without optical aid.  Most of the nearest stars are red dwarfs (38 out of 50), all of which require a telescope to be detected.  This is the most numerous type of star in the galaxy.

Images were obtained for three of these nearby red-dwarf stars:  Ross 614 in Monoceros, Luyten's Star in Canis Minor, and DX Cancri in the constellation Cancer.

Finder chart for three nearby red dwarf stars.  credit: SkySafariAstronomy.com

 

Ross 614 is a red-dwarf double star that lies just north of the open cluster NGC 2232 in the constellation Monoceros.  Ross 614 is 13.36 ly distant and is the 29th closest star system.  Its two components have magnitudes of 11.2 and 14.2.

Ross 614, top circle.  NGC 2232, bottom circle.

 
Ross 614.  1-deg FOV.

Luyten's Star is a 12.4-magnitude red dwarf that lies about 3 deg from the bright star Procyon in the constellation Canis Minor.  Procyon is a double star that is the 8th brightest star and the 13th closest star system at 11.4 ly .  Luyten's Star is the 22nd closest system at a distance of 12.35 ly.  These two stars are also close companions in space, with a separation of about 1.2 ly.

Procyon (left) and Luyten's Star (circled, right). Rokinon 135mm lens.

 
Luyten's Star.  1-deg FOV.

DX Cancri is the 17th closest star system and shines at magnitude 14.8 (faint!) in the constellation Cancer.

DX Cancri.  1-deg FOV.